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Barbara Gomes Beach | |
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Died | 2017 |
Family | Michael Beach |
Barbara Gomes-Beach was a community organizer and HIV/AIDS activist in Boston. [1] She was the executive director of the Multicultural AIDS Coalition, a nonprofit AIDS prevention and outreach organization in Boston, until her death in 2017. [2]
Gomes-Beach was born in Oakdale, Wareham, MA. [1] She attended Wareham High School. [1] She completed her undergraduate degree in political science from University of Massachusetts Boston and received a graduate degree in city planning from MIT. [1] Her MA thesis on STEM pre-college programs for youth of color was supervised by Mel King. [3] She was of Cape Verdean, Portuguese and African heritage. [4] She was the mother of American actor, Michael Beach. [4]
Before working at the Multicultural AIDS Coalition (MAC), Gomes-Beach worked at the Dorchester Bay Economic Development Corporation. [5] She and the MAC work to serve communities of color and end the HIV epidemic. [6]
Gomes-Beach was an advocate for black and Hispanic communities who were affected by the HIV epidemic. During her tenure at MAC, Gomes-Beach advocated for a NIAID trial on Kemron, a low-dose oral drug that was purported to aid HIV patients. [7] [8] Gomes-Beach also led a Multicultural AIDS project that focused on public education on HIV/AIDS. [9] In Massachusetts, she opposed the use of name-tracking in black and Hispanic communities that were infected with HIV. [10] Gomes-Beach was the co-chairperson of the Congressional Black Caucus' AIDS coalition, the AIDS Ad Hoc Committee. [11] She was invited to a Harvard conference, "The Untold Story: AIDS and Black Americans," to discuss the effects of HIV on Black communities and criticized the organizers for not reaching out to local communities. [12]
Gomes-Beach was a commissioner on the Commission on Status of Women in Massachusetts. [13] She was also the consultant for the National Association for Minority Contractors 1988 Convention. [14] Gomes-Beach was a member of the Cape Verdean Day Committee established to inaugurate Governor Michael Dukakis' recognition of Cape Verdean Recognition Week. [15]
In 2023, she was recognized as one of "Boston's most admired, beloved, and successful Black Women leaders" by the Black Women Lead project. [16] [17]